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Dive into the research topics where C. G. Wheat is active.

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Featured researches published by C. G. Wheat.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2004

Hydrothermal seepage patterns above a buried basement ridge, eastern flank of the Juan de Fuca Ridge

Glenn A. Spinelli; Lars Zühlsdorff; Andrew T. Fisher; C. G. Wheat; Michael J. Mottl; Volkhard Spieß; E. R. Giambalvo

proportion ofhemipelagic material, from 2 � 10 � 16 m 2 at30% hemipelagic to6 � 10 � 18 m 2 at 95% hemipelagic. Modeled seepage rates, derived from basement overpressures and sediment physical properties, range from 0 to 27 mm/yr. The average seepage rate over the entire 11 km of ridge within our study area is 1.3 mm/yr. On the basis of the model results, half of the total volume flux of seepage from the First Ridge is contributed from 25% of the study area, with flow rates � 1.1 mm/yr. Low seismic reflection amplitude anomalies are generally correlated with areas of high seepage rates. INDEX TERMS: 1815 Hydrology: Erosion and sedimentation; 1832 Hydrology: Groundwater transport; 3015 Marine Geology and Geophysics: Heat flow (benthic) and hydrothermal processes; 3022 Marine Geology and Geophysics: Marine sediments—processes and transport; 3025 Marine Geology and Geophysics: Marine seismics (0935);


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Assessing Marine Microbial Induced Corrosion at Santa Catalina Island, California

Gustavo A. Ramírez; Colleen L. Hoffman; Michael D. Lee; Ryan A. Lesniewski; Roman A. Barco; Arkadiy Garber; Brandy M. Toner; C. G. Wheat; Katrina J. Edwards; Beth N. Orcutt

High iron and eutrophic conditions are reported as environmental factors leading to accelerated low-water corrosion, an enhanced form of near-shore microbial induced corrosion. To explore this hypothesis, we deployed flow-through colonization systems in laboratory-based aquarium tanks under a continuous flow of surface seawater from Santa Catalina Island, CA, USA, for periods of 2 and 6 months. Substrates consisted of mild steel – a major constituent of maritime infrastructure – and the naturally occurring iron sulfide mineral pyrite. Four conditions were tested: free-venting “high-flux” conditions; a “stagnant” condition; an “active” flow-through condition with seawater slowly pumped over the substrates; and an “enrichment” condition where the slow pumping of seawater was supplemented with nutrient rich medium. Electron microscopy analyses of the 2-month high flux incubations document coating of substrates with “twisted stalks,” resembling iron oxyhydroxide bioprecipitates made by marine neutrophilic Fe-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB). Six-month incubations exhibit increased biofilm and substrate corrosion in the active flow and nutrient enriched conditions relative to the stagnant condition. A scarcity of twisted stalks was observed for all 6 month slow-flow conditions compared to the high-flux condition, which may be attributable to oxygen concentrations in the slow-flux conditions being prohibitively low for sustained growth of stalk-producing bacteria. All substrates developed microbial communities reflective of the original seawater input, as based on 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Deltaproteobacteria sequences increased in relative abundance in the active flow and nutrient enrichment conditions, whereas Gammaproteobacteria sequences were relatively more abundant in the stagnant condition. These results indicate that (i) high-flux incubations with higher oxygen availability favor the development of biofilms with twisted stalks resembling those of marine neutrophilic FeOB and (ii) long-term nutrient stimulation results in substrate corrosion and biofilms with different bacterial community composition and structure relative to stagnant and non-nutritionally enhanced incubations. Similar microbial succession scenarios, involving increases in nutritional input leading to the proliferation of anaerobic iron and sulfur-cycling guilds, may occur at the nearby Port of Los Angeles and cause potential damage to maritime port infrastructure.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Temperature and Redox Effect on Mineral Colonization in Juan de Fuca Ridge Flank Subsurface Crustal Fluids

Jean Paul M Baquiran; Gustavo A. Ramírez; Amanda G. Haddad; Brandy M. Toner; Samuel Hulme; C. G. Wheat; Katrina J. Edwards; Beth N. Orcutt

To examine microbe-mineral interactions in subsurface oceanic crust, we evaluated microbial colonization on crustal minerals that were incubated in borehole fluids for 1 year at the seafloor wellhead of a crustal borehole observatory (IODP Hole U1301A, Juan de Fuca Ridge flank) as compared to an experiment that was not exposed to subsurface crustal fluids (at nearby IODP Hole U1301B). In comparison to previous studies at these same sites, this approach allowed assessment of the effects of temperature, fluid chemistry, and/or mineralogy on colonization patterns of different mineral substrates, and an opportunity to verify the approach of deploying colonization experiments at an observatory wellhead at the seafloor instead of within the borehole. The Hole U1301B deployment did not have biofilm growth, based on microscopy and DNA extraction, thereby confirming the integrity of the colonization design against bottom seawater intrusion. In contrast, the Hole U1301A deployment supported biofilms dominated by Epsilonproteobacteria (43.5% of 370 16S rRNA gene clone sequences) and Gammaproteobacteria (29.3%). Sequence analysis revealed overlap in microbial communities between different minerals incubated at the Hole U1301A wellhead, indicating that mineralogy did not separate biofilm structure within the 1-year colonization experiment. Differences in the Hole U1301A wellhead biofilm community composition relative to previous studies from within the borehole using similar mineral substrates suggest that temperature and the diffusion of dissolved oxygen through plastic components influenced the mineral colonization experiments positioned at the wellhead. This highlights the capacity of low abundance crustal fluid taxa to rapidly establish communities on diverse mineral substrates under changing environmental conditions such as from temperature and oxygen.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018

Sediment Microbial Communities Influenced by Cool Hydrothermal Fluid Migration

Laura A. Zinke; Brandi Kiel Reese; James McManus; C. G. Wheat; Beth N. Orcutt; Jan P. Amend

Cool hydrothermal systems (CHSs) are prevalent across the seafloor and discharge fluid volumes that rival oceanic input from rivers, yet the microbial ecology of these systems are poorly constrained. The Dorado Outcrop on the ridge flank of the Cocos Plate in the northeastern tropical Pacific Ocean is the first confirmed CHS, discharging minimally altered <15°C fluid from the shallow lithosphere through diffuse venting and seepage. In this paper, we characterize the resident sediment microbial communities influenced by cool hydrothermal advection, which is evident from nitrate and oxygen concentrations. 16S rRNA gene sequencing revealed that Thaumarchaea, Proteobacteria, and Planctomycetes were the most abundant phyla in all sediments across the system regardless of influence from seepage. Members of the Thaumarchaeota (Marine Group I), Alphaproteobacteria (Rhodospirillales), Nitrospirae, Nitrospina, Acidobacteria, and Gemmatimonadetes were enriched in the sediments influenced by CHS advection. Of the various geochemical parameters investigated, nitrate concentrations correlated best with microbial community structure, indicating structuring based on seepage of nitrate-rich fluids. A comparison of microbial communities from hydrothermal sediments, seafloor basalts, and local seawater at Dorado Outcrop showed differences that highlight the distinct niche space in CHS. Sediment microbial communities from Dorado Outcrop differ from those at previously characterized, warmer CHS sediment, but are similar to deep-sea sediment habitats with surficial ferromanganese nodules, such as the Clarion Clipperton Zone. We conclude that cool hydrothermal venting at seafloor outcrops can alter the local sedimentary oxidation–reduction pathways, which in turn influences the microbial communities within the fluid discharge affected sediment.


Archive | 2005

Scientific and technical design and deployment of long-term subseafloor observatories for hydrogeologic and related experiments, IODP Expedition 301, eastern flank of Juan de Fuca Ridge

Andrew T. Fisher; C. G. Wheat; Keir Becker; Earl E. Davis; Hans W. Jannasch; D. Schroeder; R. Dixon; Tom Pettigrew; R. Meldrum; Robert I. MacDonald; Mogens Nielsen; Martin R. Fisk; James P. Cowen; Wolfgang Bach; Katrina J. Edwards


Integrated Ocean Drilling Program: Preliminary Reports | 2012

Initiation of long-term coupled microbiological, geochemical, and hydrological experimentation within the seafloor at North Pond, western flank of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge

Katrina J. Edwards; N. Backert; Wolfgang Bach; Keir Becker; Adam Klaus; Dale W. Griffin; L. Anderson; A.G. Haddad; Y. Harigane; P.L. Campion; H. Hirayama; H.J. Mills; S.M. Hulme; Kentaro Nakamura; Steffen Leth Jørgensen; Beth N. Orcutt; T.L. Insua; Y.-S. Park; V. Rennie; E.C. Salas; Olivier J. Rouxel; Fengping Wang; J.A. Russel; C. G. Wheat; K. Sakata; M. Brown; J.L. Magnusson; Z. Ettlinger


Archive | 2011

Design, deployment, and status of borehole observatory systems used for single-hole and cross-hole experiments, IODP Expedition 327, eastern flank of Juan de Fuca Ridge

Andrew T. Fisher; C. G. Wheat; Keir Becker; James P. Cowen; Beth N. Orcutt; Samuel M Hulme; K. Inderbitzen; A. Haddad; Tom Pettigrew; Earl E. Davis; Hans W. Jannasch; K. Grigar; R. Aduddell; R. Meldrum; Robert I. MacDonald; Katrina J. Edwards


Archive | 2004

Site surveys related to IODP Expedition 301; ImageFlux (S0149) and RetroFlux (TN116) expeditions and earlier studies

L. Zuehlsdorff; M. Hutnak; Andrew T. Fisher; Volkhard Spiess; Earl E. Davis; Mladen R. Nedimovic; Suzanne M. Carbotte; H. Villinger; Keir Becker; Tetsuro Urabe; Adam Klaus; Gerardo J. Iturrino; Anne Bartetzko; Rosalind M. Coggon; Marion Dumont; Bert Engelen; Shusaku Goto; Lisa Hawkins; Verena B Heuer; Samuel M Hulme; Fumio Inagaki; Shoichi Kiyokawa; Mark A. Lever; Satoshi Nakagawa; Mark Nielsen; Takuroh Noguchi; William W. Sager; Masumi Sakaguchi; B. O. Steinsbu; Takeshi Tsuji


Archive | 2005

Characterization of Six Vent Fields Within the Lau Basin

Margaret K. Tivey; Paul R. Craddock; Jeffery S. Seewald; Vicki Lynn Ferrini; Sang-Ho Kim; Michael J. Mottl; N. A. Sterling; Anna-Louise Reysenbach; C. G. Wheat


Archive | 2011

The SmartPlug and GeniusPlug: simple retrievable observatory systems for NanTroSEIZE borehole monitoring

A. Kopf; D.M. Saffer; E. E. Davis; S. Hammerschmidt; A. LaBonte; R. Meldrum; S. Toczko; R. Lauer; M. Heesemann; Robert I. MacDonald; C. G. Wheat; Hans W. Jannasch; Katrina J. Edwards; Beth N. Orcutt; A.G. Haddad; Heinrich Villinger; E. Araki; K. Kitada; T. Kimura; Y. Kido

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Hans W. Jannasch

Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute

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Beth N. Orcutt

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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Katrina J. Edwards

University of Southern California

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Jeffery S. Seewald

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Margaret K. Tivey

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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